Thom Yorke, the lead singer with group
Radiohead has demanded that Tony Blair be removed from office immediately
and that the people of the UK be the ones to do it.

Yorke has just released a solo album entitled
'The Eraser' much of which encapsulates the uncertainty and climate of fear
that the government has enforced upon this country.

In a public post on the band's website
Yorke stressed in his own inimitable way:

ive had enough of this

our government sitting on the fence with the US
while world war 3 appears
to be breaking out in Lebanon and Northern Israel.

we must throw Tony Blair our of office NOW.

he does not represent the views of the british
people.

he does not represent the views of his foreign
office and officials.

he does not even represent the views of those in
his cabinet.

he cares far too much about his relationship with
Bush, and Murdoch.

this man is not fit to be our prime minister.

its a nice sunny day. come on lets do it. you know
it makes sense.

a vote of no confidence. or something. anything..

Clearly Yorke has taken note of the fact that whilst
WWIII is brewing Tony Blair has been living it up in San Francisco, doing
business deals with elite figures and most likely visiting
the Bohemian Grove.

Yorke is the latest icon in the music
industry to speak out. Earlier this year Neil
Young released his anti-war protest album 'Living with war'
which took direct
swipes at Bush and the Neocons in the Whitehouse.

The first single from Yorke's album is
entitled 'Harrowdown Hill'. The song is about the mystery surrounding the
death of former weapons inspector Dr David Kelly and the shockwave of aftermath
since the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

The line "Did I fall or was I pushed,
and where's the blood?", entertains the evidence that suggests Dr
David Kelly did not commit suicide but was murdered by elements
within our own government in order to cover up the fact that evidence supporting
WMDs in Iraq was falsified.

It is thought that Dr David Kelly was
about to go public with this evidence but then he was mysteriously found
dead in the woods near Harrowdown Hill, a phrase he had himself used to
describe what may happen to him should things turn out badly.

The video features much police state activity
and clearly highlights Yorke's discomfort with the current political climate
in the UK .

Yorke has also submitted a track, 'Black
Swan', from 'The Eraser' , to appear during the end credits of Richard linklater's
'A Scanner Darkly'. The film is an adaption of Philip K Dick's
novel of the same name and depicts a near future America that has lost the
war on drugs and capitulated into the tentacles of a pervasive control grid.

Art forms such as 'The Eraser' and 'A
Scanner Darkly' represent the latest example of a refreshing and burgeoning
trend in that seeks to enlighten the listener/viewer into recognizing the
real world prison barriers being erected around society today.

Yorke has previously spoken out and attended
marches over the the use of UK army stations by the US for advanced missile
defense and by the NSA for eavesdropping. He is vehemently against the planned
weaponization of space by the Neocons in office, commonly referred to as
'star wars' or 'son of star wars'.